When scientists hoard data, no one can tell what works

mostlysignssomeportents:



Peer review and replication are critical to the scientific method,

but in medical trials, a combination of pharma company intransigence and

scientists’ fear of being pilloried for human error means that the raw

data that we base life-or-death decisions upon is routinely withheld,

meaning that the errors lurk undetected in the data for years – and

sometimes forever.



In an outstanding article for Buzzfeed, Ben “Bad Pharma

Goldacre tries to untangle the complex web of phenomena that results in

trial-data secrecy, while conveying the urgency of independent auditing

of that data.



Adversarial peer review is the process by which your friends point out

your errors and your enemies call you an idiot for making them. It’s

bruising – and it’s become so uncommon that the press reports on human

error in studies as though it was a scandal, rather than the routine

phenomenon it really is. This creates a vicious cycle: researchers are

fearful of publishing their data, making the detection of errors into a

rarity. This rareness makes those errors into scandals. The scandals

make researchers reluctant to publish.


Read the rest…



Well either they are knowingly hiding results to huge expensive trials or it’s a lot cheaper to just say you did the research than actually doing it.


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Published on July 27, 2015 06:30
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